A
DEVELOPMENT DISASTER:
THE PAK MUN DAM IN THAILAND
By Joe Rupp
For the past half-decade Thailand's
Pak Mun Dam has been recognized by environmental and
human rights groups as a posterchild of insensitive,
inequitable, top-down development strategy. Despite
civil society's criticism, however, thousands of local
villagers still squat in a makeshift, shantytown protest
village only yards from the dam. They eat, sleep and
commune in protest of the dam that has stolen their
own livelihoods, their families' food source and their
children's playground. Still today their demands to
permanently decommission the dam, restore the river
ecology and revitalize community health remain unmet.
I recently had the opportunity to
study about, work for, and live with this group of
dispossessed villagers.
HISTORY
Pak Mun Dam is situated 5.5 kilometers upstream from
the confluence of the Mun and the Mekong Rivers. Above
the dam, the Muns waters are fed by a basin
three times the size of the Netherlands.
Because of such an expansive ecological base, environmental
groups and biologists were concerned how the dam would
affect migratory fish from the Mekong, one of the
planet's most diverse waterways. Doctors raised the
issue of schistosomiasis, a deadly worm that resides
in stagnant water. Human rights organizations questioned
how resettlement and compensation plans could prove
effective if no topographical map of water level was
released. Civil society fumed at the lack of participatory
process, as countless villagers were told of their
soon-to-be neighbor. After all, villagers had never
requested the electricity or irrigation the dam was
to provide.
In 1990 the resolution to build
the Pak Mun Dam passed the Thai parliament. The only
environmental and social impact assessment performed
for this project was completed seven years before.
The study assessed a dam of different proportions
than what was actually built and assumed it to be
several kilometers downstream from its eventual site.
Despite several dramatic displays of protest, including
villagers strapping themselves to rocks slated for
explosive removal, the project barreled forward. A
thirteen percent budgetary boost from the World Bank
buoyed the monster, and in 1994, voila, a dam was
born.
IN HINDSIGHT
Eight years later, it's apparent the only factor keeping
the dam in place is a fear of losing political face.
It can safely be said, the project has been a failure
on all fronts; project costs nearly doubled, ballooning
from an expected 3.88 billion Baht to and eventual
6.6 billion. Power generation, estimated at 136 MW
in the project proposal, barely scratches 21 MW, enough
to power one Wal-Mart. Irrigation is non-existent.
And tourism, the Thailand fallback? Well, remember
that shantytown protest village? That's positioned
on the 'scenic overlook.' Even more unfortunate have
been the effects unforeseen, at least by the government
and the Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand
(EGAT). According to the 1998 World Bank Operation
and Evaluation Report, fish catch and income decreased
by 50% from 1994. A study by the Thai NGO, Project
for Ecological Recovery, found upwards of 75% reductions
in incomes only a year later.. Vegetation has been
destroyed. The dry-season riverbank, usually a fertile
area for local agriculture, is inundated year-round.
Mitigation efforts have proved obsolete.
A fish ladder, unwisely modeled after the designs
of the Columbia River and customized for the sleek-swimming
Pacific Northwest Salmon has, not surprisingly, flopped.
Said Dr. Pladprasop Suraswasdi, former director of
the Royal Fisheries Department, "We know nothing
about the pattern and behavior of fish migration."
Prawns were introduced to the reservoir in hopes of
reviving local fishing incomes but are unable to reproduce.
Local, small-scale, subsistence fisherman, accustomed
to the shallow rapids, have no equipment for the style
of fishing the reservoir necessitates. Communities
and families have suffered the brunt of the load,
as children and women have been forced to seek low-pay
work in Bangkok.
The final judgment broke when the
World Commission on Dams (WCD), a panel of NGOs, businessmen,
politicians and engineers assembled by the World Bank,
deemed Pak Mun a tragedy. Their case study of Pak
Mun, released in 2000, states, "If all the benefits
and costs were adequately assessed, it is unlikely
that the project would have been built."
DAMN DAMS
Pak Mun is a textbook example of development projects
that lack necessity and, for most persons, desirability.
Large dam projects are especially prone to this tendency.
Together with the WCD report, Patrick McCully's "Silenced
Rivers" throws light on the inequities and drawbacks
of dams which usually go unreported. Most often a
dam is built, then justified, not vice versa. Those
that lose out are those most dependent on and responsible
for a healthy local environment: poorly represented,
traditional communities. Those that win are transnational
corporations, which are brought in for construction,
financing and consulting. These companies benefit
most from surplus electricity and suffer least from
heightened water costs. After large chunks of profit
and benefits flow over the border, what's left is
a dam that typically fails to meet expected benefits
and exceeds expected costs.
The global anti-dam movement reflects
a growing sentiment among many human rights and earth
rights organizations who have watched this pattern
repeat itself again and again in the South. Supported
by NGOs such as the International Rivers Network and
by committed political activists such as Arundhati
Roy in India, local communities in the South are able
to further strengthen their fight.
HOW MANY MILES MUST WE MARCH?
Twelve years after a handful of villagers strapped
themselves to the rivers rocks, the protestors
resolve has remained undeterred. Pak Mun villagers
have joined forces with other dispossessed of Thailand
to create the Assembly of the Poor, a large peoples
organization that has limited but undeniable influence
in national politics. They have organized a 2,000-mile
protest march and raised more than ten protest villages
throughout the nation including one in front of Bangkoks
Government House. In 2001 they were successful in
lobbying the government to open the eight sluice gates
of the dam in order to perform studies on the natural
river ecology and the communities it supports. Released
last month, this study notes the social and ecological
damage far outweighs the benefits from electricity.
Moreover, it illustrates the communities and
ecosystems regenerative ability. Regardless,
the Thai government is threatening to once again ignore
the plight of villagers and reasoning of academics.
Surely, as long as Thailand's powerful continue to
take their cues from Western political, economic and
corporate paradigms, the villagers fight to
stay afloat will still remain.
A video and in-depth presentation
regarding the Pak Mun Dam was be held Thursday, November
7th at 7pm at the Illinois Disciples Foundation, 610
E. Springfield Ave, Champaign. Opportunities for attendees
to write and sign letters followed the presentation.
Joe Rupp is a student at the U of I majoring
in Agriculture and Consumer Economics with a focus
on International Trade, Policy and Development. This
past year he spent over seven months in Thailand,
first as a student and then as an informal correspondent
between the study abroad program, the villagers of
Pak Mun and several local and international NGOs.
Joe says the experience really lit a fire inside him:
Thailand not only exposed me to a different
way of life, culturally, economically and politically,
it also clearly showed me the connection between them
and us, the United States and the rest of the world.
You can't understand that and not want to do anything. |